Our innovative presidential election maps offer a snapshot of where things stand and where they are headed in the state-by-state hunt for electoral votes.
Armed with public opinion polls, the history and demographics of each state, knowledge of the nation’s geographic and cultural diversity, and common sense and intuition, political director Maurice Berger offers continuous updates and a blog (below map) on the state of the presidential race. Today’s Map Today monitors its current status. Tomorrow’s Map Today charts its momentum in the coming days or weeks. And Election Day Today records the actual outcome of the 2012 presidential race.

Today’s Map Today monitors the current status of the race.Roll over a state for poll averages, click for commentary.

Like, Florida, Clinton is out-performing Obama's 2012 numbers. He lost the state by a whisker. But Trump counties have not all reported consistent. But at 85% in Durham County, Clinton is building a firewall. But many of the smaller GOP counties are still out.

Polling over the past three days in Ohio have showed the race moving away from Trump. Our guess is that the state will still be close, but we are now wondering if Clinton might win the state. Especially if the larger, urban counties are coming in more slowly.

If you are watching election returns, a few things to know. Small, often
rural and GOP counties report first. They tend to have small
populations relative to urban, Democratic strongholds. They tend to come in
later and have a much greater structural burden, re: counting hundreds
of thousands of ballots. So keep things in perspective, whether you are
Clinton or Trump.

According to Votecastr, which calculates approximate votes
tallies on an ongoing basis through election day, Clinton is leading in
eight out of eight key battleground states:

Florida: Clinton 49% Trump 45%

Iowa: Clinton 47% Trump 46%

Colorado: Clinton 47% Trump 42%

Nevada: Clinton 47% Trump 44%

New Hampshire: Clinton 47% Trump 45%

Ohio: Clinton 46% Trump 45%

Pennsylvania: Clinton 48% Trump 45%

Wisconsin: Clinton 49% Trump 42%

Exit polling is provided by Votecastr (and Edison,
which is used by all other media outlets). Their tally updates all day
as voting patterns change. The accuracy of their novel methodology is,
of course, yet to be proved.

According to Votecastr, which calculates approximate votes
tallies on an ongoing basis through election day, Clinton is leading infive out of seven key battleground states. Over the past few houses, their tallies have shown the race tightening somewhat. It is also unclear whether they have fixed their calculation problem to include all three voter tiers--early, pre-election polling, and election day voting:

Florida: Clinton 48% Trump 45% D+3

Iowa: Trump 46% Clinton 45% R+1

Colorado: Clinton 46% Trump 43% D+3

Nevada: Clinton 46% Trump 45% D+1

Ohio: Clinton 46% Trump 45% R+1

Pennsylvania: Clinton 48% Trump 45% D+3

Wisconsin: Clinton 48% Trump 43% D+5

These numbers are based only on election day voting numbers. So we'll
need to wait until they're reconciled with early vote analysis and
pre-election polling. Exit polling is provided by Votecastr (and Edison,
which is used by all other media outlets). Their tally updates all day
as voting patterns change. The accuracy of their novel methodology is,
of course, yet to be proved. And complete tallys are not, as yet,
available.

According to Votecastr, which calculates approximate votes tallies on an ongoing basis through election day, Clinton is leading in seven out of eight key battleground states:

Florida: Clinton 49% Trump 45%

Iowa: Trump 46% Clinton 45%

Colorado: Clinton 47% Trump 42%

Nevada: Clinton 47% Trump 44%

New Hampshire: Clinton 47% Trump 43%

Ohio: Clinton 46% Trump 45%

Pennsylvania: Clinton 48% Trump 44%

Wisconsin: Clinton 49% Trump 43%

This numbers are based only on election day voting numbers. So we'll need to wait until they're reconciled with early vote analysis and pre-election polling. Exit polling is provided by Votecastr (and Edison, which is used by all other media outlets). Their tally updates all day as voting patterns change. The accuracy of their novel methodology is, of course, yet to be proved. And complete tallys are not, as yet, available.